Looking for a new job? This free e-book is for you.


Get Back to Work Faster - by Jill Konrath with Jeff Ogden

This book was written some time ago, but the lessons in it are as timeless as ever. If you’re an out of work, college educated professional, this is for you.Fortune magazine cover

It’s no longer being marketed, but you can download the free PDF using the link here or simply click the image here..

Here’s what you’ll learn reading this.

  1. Stop Playing the Old Game
  2. Sharpen Your Value Proposition
  3. Develop a Strong Online Presence
  4. Target and Research Prospective Employers
  5. Pursue Known Opportunities
  6. Job Creation: How to Make New Opportunities
  7. Use a Targeted Direct Mail Approach
  8. Conversations and Connections
  9. A Time of Growth

I’m deeply honored to be featured in this book and if it can help anyone, I’m delighted to share it.

What do you think? We love to read your comments and appreciate those who share on social media.

My Tip for Job-Seekers: Be the Person You Want to Be - not the Person You Are


“Become the person you wish to be, not the person you are today”

Recently I attended the MarketingPros Happy Hour in NYC and I met a couple of Help Wantedjob-seekers looking to move out of dead end jobs.

They asked me for advice and I shared the suggestion above.

Become the person you wish to be, not the person you are.

For instance, you are a report developer who wants to move into sales. Then become the world’s best sales expert.

In addition, I suggested they download and read the free book for job-seeking professionals, Get Back to Work Faster. (Full disclosure: I am featured in that book.)

What do you think of my advice?

Why Michael Jordan would get a rejection letter | The Fatal Flaw in the Job Description/Resume Process


B2B Lead Generation | A flawed job process

If you read our earlier post More Reasons to Outsource B2B Lead Generation, you saw Job Descriptionthe damning data from LeadershipIQ - lots of new hires fail and many more are so-so at best - and very few are stars.

(CSO Insights found that only 7% of companies said they “excelled” at interviewing and hiring salespeople.)

The bottom line: Companies are doing a good job of hiring mediocre employees and terrible at hiring stars.

I believe the reason for that is the fact we use what I consider to be an antiquated process for finding employees - which has the unintended consequence of eliminating stars - the job description/resume process.

Why doesn’t it work?

The current process, especially with the flood of resumes in a weak economy, caused hiring executives to look for the unblemished candidate - in effect, one with perfect skin, figure, hair etc. After all, with so many candidates, we can be very choosy. Flawed candidates have no chance.

Therein lies the problem.

Failure is a hallmark of all very successful people. Superstars are risk takers - so they fail a lot, but succeed beyond wildest dreams. But our antiqued process prevents us from hiring stars.

Let’s look at hypothetical case to illustrate:

Star Basketball Player Needed for Company Team
Young 15-22 year old needed to play for company basketball team. Must be great shooter with unblemished record.

We post a job to Linkedin and receive hundreds of resumes from you, aspiring basketball players. We sit down and start going through the pile. It takes hours.

As we look at resume after resume of great players, one catches our eye for a moment. This kid scores a lot of points and his teams win. But upon closer examination, we notice that he was cut from his high school team. So we throw it in the discard pile. Must be something wrong with him - he was “fired” by a coach. (No one hires someone “fired” by a prior manager, do they?)

The kid in the Discard pile we just threw out is Michael Jordan - the greatest basketball player in history. When Michael Jordan was 16 years old, he was cut from his high school basketball team. In hindsight, it was the best thing that ever happened to him, as he worked twice as hard to become the best of all time. Failure helped him.Michael Jordan

The key point: Flawed candidates are often the best, but our antiquated process is designed to weed them out.

If the job description/resume process fails to uncover stars, what can we do instead?

Here are my three tips to uncover superstars of tomorrow:

  1. Look well beyond the resume
    Recommendations on Linkedin. Blog articles they wrote. Content they created. Run their Twitter and blog through Grader.com - a free evaluation tool from Hubspot.
  2. Search for fast failure with bounce-back
    Look for cases where they encountered a difficult situation and bounced back. Stars fail because they are courageous enough to take risks. And industry studies have shown that personality traits, such as coachability and ability to work well with others, is far more important than industry experience.
  3. Evaluate their overall online presence
    Google their name. Today, executives need a strong online presence. Should not be hard at all to find them. Are they on social networks, do they write a blog, do they have recommendations?

What do you think? Do you have other ideas on how companies can uncover stars of tomorrow? We love comments and those who share.

Read my blog on Kindle

Jeff Ogden (@fearlesscomp) is the President of the B2B lead generation consultancy Find New Customers. Find New Customers helps companies dramatically improve revenue results by transforming the way they attract, engage and win new customers. Contact Find New Customers by calling (516) 495-9350 or sending an email to sales at findnewcustomers.com.

How to Find New Customers is the simple guide to B2B demand generation.

“If more companies listened to (Find New Customers) a lot more would be sold.” Dan McDade, Pointclear.

How Businesses Use Social Media for Recruiting [INFOGRAPHIC]


Get Back to Work FasterErica Swallow of Mashable posted this and with so many out of work (and I was personally featured in the book Get Back to Work Faster), I deemed it important to share - and I LOVE infographics. Thanks Erica. Erica’s bio follows the post.

______

Savvy job seekers have turned to digital and social media tools to help them in their job searches, and now recruiters are on board with the power of social media as a recruiting tool.

LinkedIn isn’t the only social network that helps in the job search process — Facebook, Twitter, YouTube and Google+ have all been used by people to land jobs in innovative ways.

And interesting takes on the digital resume are increasingly popular, with job seekers creating infographic resumes, video resumes and other visual resumes that set them apart from other job applicants.

Employers are taking note of the importance of social media in the recruiting process, and the majority of businesses are turning to social media to find and evaluate job candidates, according to this infographic compiled by Career Enlightenment, a resource for online job seekers.

Take a look and let us know what you think of using social media to find a job.

Erica Swallow is an Associate Editor of Partner Content at Mashable, working primarily on growing Mashable‘s supported content program. She also writes within Mashable‘s business and marketing vertical. Erica is an international speaker, having most recently spoken at WOMMA Summit in Las Vegas, Social Marketers Summit in Prague and Social Media Brasil in São Paulo. Follow Erica on Twitter at https://twitter.com/#!/ericaswallow

Read my blog on Kindle

Jeff Ogden (@fearlesscomp) is President of the B2B lead generation consultancy, Find New Customers. Find New Customers helps companies dramatically improve revenue results by transforming the ways they attract, engage and win new customers. Contact Find New Customers by calling (516) 495-9350 or by sending an email to sales at findnewcustomers.com. Or set a meeting with Jeff by clicking Set a Meeting.

One and done?


B2B Demand Generation | My thoughts

I really don’t like to talk about politics. Someone is upset.

I like to stick to B2B marketing topics, as I’m President of the B2B lead generation company Find New Customers. But since I was featured in the book by Jill Konrath, Get Back to Work Faster, I have a vested interest in my out-of-work comrades

But after years of a terrible economy, and millions still without jobs, it’s time to stick a fork in him. He’s done. Barack Obama should be a one-term President.

Iowa Voters Do Not Disapprove Of Obama, They STRONGLY Disapprove

Obama = Carter?

Both of these men are considered super-smart and charismatic. But one is considered one of the worst presidents ever.

Barach ObamaJimmy Carter

Losing the Battle. Winning the War.


B2B Demand Generation | How Seeds can germinate

Some time ago, I traveled out to the West Coast to interview with a $100MM software company. I didn’t get the job.

The CMO there was a man named Andrew S. Andrew left the company soon after.

Yesterday Andrew contact me about a project he’d like to do together.

“I have others who do this, but having met you and seen your ideas and energy when you interviewed at my former company, I think this would be easy and fun.”

The moral: Keep planting seeds. One germinates when you least expect it.

HOW TO: Manage Your Online Reputation Using SEO


Wacky News of the Week: Manage Your Online Reputation

Some of you may know that I was profiled in the book, Get Back to Work Faster, so I know a bit about managing your online presence. For instance, on my Linkedin profile, I have over 35 recommendations from top marketing experts.

(By the way, I had to say good-bye to a long-time friend and supporter yesterday when I learned that I cannot trust her. Trust was destroyed when she shared something that she undoubtedly knew would hurt me badly. So good-bye, JK. That was hard.)

But your online reputation is so important that I want to share this great article from Mashable.

___

It’s a fair bet that your boss, dates and anyone you give your business card to will type your name into a search engine. If something negative appears in the results, your online reputation can quickly damage your offline reputation — and affect your life.

Of the almost 80% of U.S. hiring managers who had searched for candidates online, 70% of them said they had rejected a candidate based on what they found in his or her search results, according to a 2009 study commissioned by Microsoft.

While you might not be able to remove damaging content from the Internet, there’s a good chance that you can minimize its impact using simple SEO techniques. And even if your search results are squeaky clean, the same techniques can help you control how you’re perceived online.

Here’s how to get started.


Step 1: See Where You Stand


Before you can manage your online reputation, you have to assess it. Type your names in search engines. Set up search alerts for your name (Google recently made this easier to do from the Google dashboard through a new “Me on the Web” tool).

If you find something unflattering, ask yourself:

  • Did I post it?If, for instance, photos from your Flickr account that you’d rather keep private are showing up in search results for your name, you can simply delete the photos or adjust your privacy settings.After you’ve removed the offensive content, you can use Google’s URL removal tool to stop it from appearing as a cached copy or snippet in search results. If you do nothing, the content will still eventually drop from Google’s index — it will just take a bit longer to disappear.
  • Is it personal information that could be used in a crime? If someone posts your social security number, bank account number, credit card number or an image of your handwritten signature, Google will make efforts to remove it from search results. It will also contact the site’s hosting company to request that the page be taken down.
  • Is it posted on a high-traffic news site? Competing for search results with a popular news site is difficult. But Patrick Ambron, the cofounder of a personal online reputation management service called Brand-Yourself, says that all hope is not lost. “Google usually only likes to rank one result per domain name per page,” he says. “So if you could get another result on the same domain name like Huffington Post that was better optimized for your name, you could theoretically knock the bad article off.” One way to do this is to create a profile on that news site using your full name. Use as many links as possible, and link to the profile from all of your other web properties.

If you can’t answer “yes” to either of these questions, your best bet for reducing the visibility of negative content is to compete for top search results using positive content.


Step 2: Post Positive Content


“If you can’t get the content removed from the original site, you probably won’t be able to completely remove it from Google’s search results, either,” reads Google’s guide to keeping personal information out of Google. “Instead, you can try to reduce its visibility in the search results by proactively publishing useful, positive information about yourself or your business.”

In other words, if you want to make negative webpages appear lower in search, you’ll need to create content of relevance to push the negative links down. Google suggests responding to negative reviews of your business, for instance.

Profiles on social networks are powerful tools for this purpose, as results from large sites like Facebook and Twitter often carry more SEO power than a single post on something like a personal blog.


Step 3. Create an Identity Hub


One secret to pushing your positive online presence further up in search results is to make a hub that links to all of your content. Ambron recommends these tips for pushing your hub to the top of search results for your name.

  • Claim your domain name. Including the search term (in this case, your name) in the URL of your web page tells search engines what the page is about.
  • Mention yourself. You’re trying to tell search spiders, “This page is about me!” A good way to do that is to use your name a lot. Use your name in tabs and headers.
  • Link to your content. “[Google] considers each link to your site a vote for the site,” Ambron says. “Google has gotten pretty smart, so where those links come from is very important. The more reputable links are better votes. A vote from CNNis better than some site you made that you just linked to yourself.”Remember all of those social media profiles that you created in step two? They’re attached to reputable sources like Facebook and Twitter, which makes their “votes” count as much more reputable than a page you just created.Sign up for as many of them as possible (use one of these sites to see what is available), and then link them all to your hub.
  • Post often. Search engines like fresh content. One easy way to create it is to post your social media feeds to your blog.

Step 4. Consider Automating the Process


There are several services that will help you with your quest for a pristine online reputation for a small fee. Brand-Yourself, for instance, keeps track of your reputation on a dashboard and helps you improve it by helping you raise existing positive content or helping you create new positive content. Vizibility allows users to pre-select the information they want displayed in “search results” from a special button or URL that can be added to online profiles, websites, resumes, email signatures and business cards.

The Future of Search Series is supported by SES San Francisco Conference & Expo, the leading search, social and display conference. From August 15-19, get five days of education, inspiration and conversations with marketing experts across the digital space. Save 20% with the code MASH20.

Read my blog on Kindle

Jeff Ogden (@fearlesscomp) is President of the B2B lead generation consultancy, Find New Customers. He presented “How to Build an Awesome Personal Brand” at the 140 Social Media Conference and appeared to discuss B2B lead generation on Sales Lead Management Radio.
To learn more about Jeff, please click on Who is the Fearless Competitor?

Find New Customers helps companies (with between 150 and 5,000 employees who sell complex products to businesses) to implement world-class lead generation programs. As companies struggle to create quality sales opportunities, they turn to lead generation companies like Find New Customers.

“Find New Customers, can certainly help your business dramatically improve the flow of sales-ready leads to salespeople.” Paul Dunay, Buzz Marketing for Technology.

How to hire great employees - every time


New hires rarely work out (almost 1/2 fail within 18 months!)

HiringWhat are the chances the person you just hired will still be here in 18 months? Answer: Flip a coin.

It’s sad how bad we’re doing. Is there a better way?

News Release (WASHINGTON, D.C.) — According to a new study by Leadership IQ, 46% of newly-hired employees will fail within 18 months, while only 19% will achieve unequivocal success. For more on another theory, read “Why New Hires Fail.”

In this chart, the red represents failure, blue is so-so performance and green is “unequivocal success” Conclusion: The current approach gives you a great chance at failure, a decent chance at a so-so hire, and almost no chance of hiring a linchpin - someone who works outside established rules to create exceptional results.

That’s right. Almost 1/2 fail and less than 1 in 5 achieve “unequivocal success.” It’s that bad. Why is it not working?

The Fallacy of the Job Description

Why do companies keep making hiring mistakes? I believe it’s because they rely on an ineffective approach - evaluating candidates based on the job description. They are trying to turn a 3D person into a 2D list of skills.

To illustrate why job descriptions don’t work, let’s look at a scenario, to see if we can uncover the root causes why managers keep making bad collaborationdecisions.

You’re the hiring manager

Here is an actual case study:

You’re hiring for a large software company and you are looking for someone to own global responsibility for your largest customer - a huge global firm. Revenue has been stagnant and competitors are nipping at your heels. Time for a change.

You have three candidates under consideration- we’ll call them A, B and C:

  • Candidate A - The current rep on the account. Has handled this huge global client for three years and is well-respected.
  • Candidate B - New employee. He wowed everyone with a fast start, but never handled this account and is new to the industry. Does not know the account or the industry.
  • Candidate C - Handles that global account for our #1 competitor

Whom do you hire?

  1. Undoubtedly the vast majority of hiring managers choose C (competitor rep) - he has experience in our industry and with the client - a safe choice. We try to steal him from our competitor.
  2. Many would choose A (existing rep) - she has experience and client experience too.
  3. Few if any would choose B (green rep) - as he has no experience in our industry or with the customer. They might try if he was an existing employee, but no one would hire B off the street to do this job.

You’re in luck. All three did the job, so we have measurable results from all.  We can examine actual results of each.

Bottom line: It was no contest. One’s results dwarfed the others. But the results are not at all what we expected.

  • Candidate A was up first- revenue continued to decline. She was pushed to the side.
  • Candidate B was up second - revenue shot up by an unheard of 224% in the first 12 months. But after our company shipped a buggy release and lost a key services person, he resigned.
  • Candidate C (the best choice) - After B left, we went out and took the rep on the client from our top competitor. But he did not last 6 months - he was unable to touch Candidate B’s results. We fired him.

Conclusion: Candidate B was the best choice by far. The one no one would choose.

To understand why that happened, let’s examine all three candidates.

A and C were traditional product salespeople. They were old school. But candidate B was very different - he worked differently. His passion, teamwork skills and creativity made him a star. He devised a brilliant plan and executed it to perfection. He had the unique ability to see the world through other’s eyes - for instance, to get the rep in Italy to call on the global client. He knew that he had to make the global client the EASIEST of her 30 accounts to sell.

No one else had a plan - they were salespeople, while he was an executive leader. But a job description would not uncover this candidate.

Problem is that any job description for the role would quickly eliminate our ideal candidate. Missing experience would have killed his candidacy.

This begs a question. How do we find stars, especially when we cannot rely on standard measures of experience and industry knowledge?

The key thing we need to do IMHO is to stop driving everything through a detailed job description. Critical information is missing - namely, the personality characteristics of the star employee.

I believe the answer is for companies, before they search for new employees, they look to their top performers. Since you want to hire a top performer, learn about what makes a top performer.

Ask questions of your top performers to learn what makes them different from run of the mill employees. For instance, ask

  • What is about these people that makes them so successful?
  • What are the personality traits?
  • What are the interpersonal skills?
  • Name a time you failed. What did you learn from it and how did you recover? (Stars fail fast and learn.)
  • Tell me a time of when you did something for someone else without asking for anything in return. (Stars are self-less.)

Use what you learn to create a very different job description. I bet you’ll start including factors like passion, honesty, creativity and listening skills.

While I’m today President of the B2B lead generation consultancy, Find New Customers today, I’m was Candidate B at the huge software firm.

By the way, I was featured in the popular book for job-seeking professionals, Get Back to Work Faster.Get Back to Work Faster

What do you think? Why do hiring mistakes keep happening over and over? Do you agree or disagree with my advice?
Read my blog on Kindle

Jeff Ogden (@fearlesscomp) is President of the B2B lead generation consultancy, Find New Customers. He presented “How to Create an Awesome Personal Brand” at the 140 Social Media Conference on Long Island and appeared on Sales Lead Management Radio too.

Find New Customers helps companies (with between 150 and 5,000 employees who sell complex products to businesses) to implement world-class lead generation programs. As companies struggle to create quality sales opportunities for sales teams, they turn to lead generation companies like Find New Customers.

Sunday Post: Why Hiring Managers Keep Blowing It


New hires rarely work out (almost 1/2 fail within 18 months!)

HiringWhat are the chances the person you just hired will be here in 18 months? Answer: Flip a coin. It’s sad how bad we’re doing.

News Release (WASHINGTON, D.C.) — According to a new study by Leadership IQ, 46% of newly-hired employees will fail within 18 months, while only 19% will achieve unequivocal success. For more on another theory, read “Why New Hires Fail.”

That’s right. Almost 1/2 fail and less than 1 in 5 is highly successful. It’s that bad.

We like to change things on Sundays. Instead of talking about marketing and lead generation, let’s explore why companies keep making terrible hiring decisions over and over. (Find New Customers will use the process outlined below when we begin hiring.)

The Fallacy of the Job Description

Why do companies keep making hiring mistakes? I believe it’s because they rely on an ineffective approach - evaluating candidates based on the job description. They are trying to turn a 3D person into a 2D list of skills.

To illustrate why job descriptions don’t work, let’s look at a scenario, to see if we can uncover the root causes why managers keep making bad collaborationdecisions.

You’re the hiring manager

You’re hiring for a large software company and you are looking for someone to own global responsibility for your largest customer - a huge global firm. Revenue has been stagnant and competitors are nipping at your heels. Time for a change.

You have three candidates under consideration- we’ll call them A, B and C:

  • Candidate A - The current rep on the account. Has handled this huge global client for three years and is well-respected.
  • Candidate B - New employee. He wowed everyone with a fast start, but never handled this account and is new to the industry. Does not know the account or the industry.
  • Candidate C - Handles that global account for our #1 competitor

Whom do you hire?

  1. Undoubtedly the vast majority of hiring managers choose C (competitor rep) - he has experience in our industry and with the client - a safe choice. We try to steal him from our competitor.
  2. Many would choose A (existing rep) - she has experience and client experience too.
  3. Few if any would choose B (green rep) - as he has no experience in our industry or with the customer. They might try if he was an existing employee, but no one would hire B off the street to do this job.

You’re in luck. All three did the job, so we have measurable results from all.  We can examine actual results of each.

Bottom line: It was no contest. One’s results dwarfed the others. But the results are not at all what we expected.

  • Candidate A was up first- revenue continued to decline. She was pushed to the side.
  • Candidate B was up second - revenue shot up by an unheard of 224% in the first 12 months. But after our company shipped a buggy release and lost a key services person, he resigned.
  • Candidate C (the best choice) - After B left, we went out and took the rep on the client from our top competitor. But he did not last 6 months - he was unable to touch Candidate B’s results. We fired him.

Conclusion: Candidate B was the best choice by far. The one no one would choose.

To understand why that happened, let’s examine all three candidates.

A and C were traditional product salespeople. They were old school. But candidate B was very different - he worked differently. His passion, teamwork skills and creativity made him a star. He devised a brilliant plan and executed it to perfection.

No one else had a plan - they were salespeople, while he was an executive leader. But a job description would not uncover this candidate.

Problem is that any job description for the role would quickly eliminate our ideal candidate. Missing experience would have killed his candidacy.

This begs a question. How do we find stars, especially when we cannot rely on standard measures of experience and industry knowledge?

The key thing we need to do IMHO is to stop driving everything through a detailed job description. Critical information is missing - namely, the personality characteristics of the star employee.

I believe the answer is for companies, before they search for new employees, they look to their top performers. Since you want to hire a top performer, learn about what makes a top performer.

Ask questions of your top performers to learn what makes them different from run of the mill employees. For instance, ask

  • What is about these people that makes them so successful?
  • What are the personality traits?
  • What are the interpersonal skills?
  • Name a time you failed. What did you learn from it and how did you recover? (Stars fail fast and learn.)
  • Tell me a time of when you did something for someone else without asking for anything in return. (Stars are self-less.)

Use what you learn to create a very different job description. I bet you’ll start including factors like passion, honesty, creativity and listening skills.

While I’m today President of the B2B lead generation consultancy, Find New Customers today, I’m was Candidate B at the huge software firm.

By the way, I was featured in the popular book for job-seeking professionals, Get Back to Work Faster.Get Back to Work Faster

What do you think? Why do hiring mistakes keep happening over and over? Do you agree or disagree with my advice?
Read my blog on Kindle

Jeff Ogden (@fearlesscomp) is President of the B2B lead generation consultancy, Find New Customers. He presented at the 140 Social Media Conference on Long Island on May 26th and will appear on Sales Lead Management Radio on June 9th.

Find New Customers helps companies (with between 150 and 5,000 employees who sell complex products to businesses) to implement world-class lead generation programs. As companies struggle to create quality sales opportunities, they turn to lead generation companies like Find New Customers.

Do consultants make the best executives?


More and more I see top independent sales and marketing experts taking jobs as VPs of Sales and/or Marketing.

What is happening and why? Why are companies hiring people like Nigel

Nigel Edelshain

Nigel Edelshain

Edelshain of Sales2.0 (became VP of Sales and Marketing for TurnTo Networks) and Jep Castelein of LeadSloth (joined Marketo) And why are they better choices for those companies than hiring from competitors?

Should you consider a marketing consultant as a VP of marketing over a candidate from your industry?  I think the answer is a resounding “Yes!”

Here are 3 things that consultants offer that you don’t find with the usual candidates:

  1. Consultants have world-class networks (Top industry gurus know and trust them.)
  2. Consultants have documented expertise across multiple industries. (They’ve published blogs, eBooks, white papers, etc.)
  3. Consultants get things done(They’ve founded companies, booked revenue, turned prospects into customers, built solid relationships - all on their own.I cannot over-emphasize how important this is. Data shows that only 1 in 10 persons is a Producer (creator of things like blogs), while 2 out of ten Contribute (e.g comment on blogs) and the vast majority - 7 out of 10 - are merely Consumers (e.g, read blogs). You need to hire Producers.

My advice. Don’t overlook consultants when you need strong, innovative leaders.

What do you think? We love comments and people who share.

Jeff Ogden (@fearlesscomp) is President of the B2B lead generation consultancy, Find New Customers. He’s presenting at the 140 Social Media Conference on Long Island on May 26th and appearing on Sales Lead Management Radio on June 9th.

We help companies with between 150 and 5,000 employees who sell complex products to businesses to implement world-class lead generation programs. As companies struggle to create quality sales opportunities, they turn to lead generation companies like Find New Customers.